Donate SIGN UP

1 mile -steps

Avatar Image
tali122 | 00:46 Fri 21st Jul 2006 | How it Works
9 Answers
how many steps(two footed count) are there approxmately in 1 mile?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by tali122. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
get a pedometer or use simple mathematics
depends on how big the steps are.
rough guess of 1 yard per step (fairly big) would give you 1760 steps per mile
Obviously depends on the length of your stride....

However, there are 1760 yards in a mile - but a yard is quite a long stride (it's only a bit less than a metre).

There are also 5280 feet in a mile - but that is quite a short step (about 30cm)

Your figure will lie somewhere inbetween these figures - say your average step / stride was 2 ft (foot), then a mile would be 2640 steps.
Sorry bob your answer wasn't there when I started !
I always reckon it's about 1,000 (left and right). Maybe I'm influenced by the idea that 'mile' derives from the Latin for 1000, so, 1000 paces
why the hell do you want to no somthin like that are u really bored by any chance? lol
Based on this link I'd say about 5628?
On a normal railway track there are 2,012 sleepers to the mile (about 1250 per kilometre), making them 31.5 inches (80cm) apart. (No, bonsaimaster, I'm not bored, it's just something I know!).

This interval was set in the early days of railways when the �platelayer� or �lengthman� (the person who maintained the track) would walk his patch every day looking for defects. It was seen as a comfortable pace length enabling him to walk the track by stepping on the sleepers.

Unfortunately I am old enough to remember seeing platelayers walking along railway lines and the spacing of the sleepers did seem to enable them to walk comfortably.
The word 'mile' comes from the Latin word 'mille' meaning 'thousand', The Romans used the measure of 1000 double steps to measure that distance, which was equal to 1,618 yards. The Roman Mile was used in England up to the time of Elizabeth 1. The problem was that it couldn't be divided by the English units of measure, (rods, furlongs, etc.), without leaving fractions. So the English Mile was established at 1,760 yards by royal statute - thus, the Statute Mile.

The British Army uses a pace (single step) of 30". That would produce 2,112 paces in a mile. However, most people don't stride out like that, so the count is going to be higher - by how much will depend entirely upon the individual, and if they're in a hurry or not!

(Very curious fact...the perimeter of the Great Pyramid is 1,760 Royal Cubits, the same as the number of yards in a mile. Coincidence, or what?)

1 to 9 of 9rss feed

Do you know the answer?

1 mile -steps

Answer Question >>

Related Questions